Coming from the PC perspective, my short answer is: No.
Competition for attention is so high on this platform that almost every game needs to catch my attention on the get go (or somehow I resonate with the idea on my own accord,) thus I have been so spoiled to the point that I will simply stop playing a game the moment I don’t feel entertained. I can stop with relative ease is because I have another one more than ready to take its place.
Yes, anything with a use to me is an asset and will be cast aside like garbage when they outlive their usefulness.
That’s what happens when you have 155 games on Steam and only played 60ish of them.
But then you go, “But Riv, you’re still playing Battleborn! I see you on it all the time, you stupid lunatic! Clearly the game has a chance to survive if we got such a diligent maniac on board!” I’m only on it to reap as many credits as possible (310K as of writing) for the lootpocalypse, and it’s really “hard work”. If I get most, or even all, the skins and taunts once Friday arrives, I don’t even think I would be playing the game in the fashion I’m playing it until October 13th. I don’t even know how long I could keep playing the DLC before I get everything I want out of it. I’m guessing 2 to 3 weeks at most if I consistently have my competent group of friends, who fortunately are returning when new content drops.
I have 4 other games that are battling for my time: Divinity: Original Sin 2, Cities: Skylines, Ultra Street Fighter 4, and Borderlands 2. The last one is because I got a few friends, latecomers, playing it and wanted to join them.
I also have 40 games on my wishlist, and if any one of them suddenly drops to a steep discount, you can bet that I would be more than willing to buy and play it immediately.
One other game I wasn’t expecting to catch my attention was Fallout 4. With all the DLCs released, the Game of the Year is on the horizon, probably by Christmas or Chinese New Year 2017. Am I Chinese? I guess I pretend that I am and don’t know any English whenever I’m in court. Well, that trick would’ve worked if I wasn’t reading a novel at the time…
I’ll still enjoy Battleborn and what the upcoming content has to offer, but I don’t think I can summon up a tremendous amount of enthusiasm (unless it really astounds me) nor much desperation (only if Gearbox/2K makes horrible decisions going forward.) I lost the energy and found some peace with it once I took a few steps back and observe the landscape. Truth be told, I anticipated this would happen, but I didn’t think it would arrive this quickly.
Now I have a few options: learn how to create a city where the citizens won’t get angry at me for not providing them with water and power, or spend more time reading and writing on my projects…
For those who didn’t read all that stuff above, Battleborn on every area needs to perform above and beyond in order to survive.

